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Query: UMLS:C0019045 (
hemoglobinopathies
)
2,704
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied two members of an African American family with erythrocytosis. An abnormal hemoglobin variant with an electrophoretic pattern on cellulose acetate similar to Hb J was identified. The oxygen dissociation curve using whole blood was biphasic, dramatically left-shifted, and hyperbolic. Sequence analysis of DNA from the proband showed heterozygosity for a T-->A change at the first position of codon 145 in the beta-globin gene which results in the substitution of an asparagine residue for normal tyrosine. The second cycle of C-terminal amino acid sequence analysis of a mixture of alpha- and beta-globin chains showed tyrosine, aspartic acid, and small amounts of asparagine. Collectively, these results indicate the existence of a mutation at codon 145 of the beta-globin gene which encodes for asparagine instead of tyrosine, and that asparagine then undergoes a partial posttranslational deamidation to aspartic acid. This amino acid substitution corresponds to Hb Osler, which is a high oxygen affinity hemoglobin variant, initially described to be caused by a substitution of Tyr-->Asp at beta 145. Posttranslational amino acid modification may constitute an important component in the pathophysiology of
hemoglobinopathies
.
Hemoglobin
1997 Mar
PMID:Hb Osler [beta 145(HC2)Tyr-->Asp] results from posttranslational modification. 910 Dec 80
Prevalence of thalassemias and/or
hemoglobinopathies
, particularly hemoglobin E, and cholangiocarcinoma were found more prominently in the lower part of the Northeast of Thailand as compared with the upper part of this region or any other area of the country. The aim of this study was to evaluate if there was coincident distribution or some relationship.
Hemoglobin
typing by the cellulose acetate method was performed in 111 cases of cholangiocarcinoma, mainly diagnosed by ultrasonography, compared with 146 normal controls. It was found that hemoglobin E trait and beta-thalassemia trait were significantly higher in the former group.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin typing in cholangiocarcinoma. 944 33
A case is reported of a previously healthy 52-year-old African American male who presented with acute onset of abdominal pain. Progressive increase in his abdominal symptoms led to an exploratory laparotomy; however, no pathology was discovered. Postoperatively, the patient became hypoxemic which progressed to diffuse infiltrates on chest x-ray, suggestive of adult respiratory distress syndrome. He had a rapidly fatal course. Autopsy showed bone marrow infarction, fat embolism, splenomegaly, and widespread congestion with sickle erythrocytes.
Hemoglobin
electrophoresis done postmortem showed hemoglobin (Hb) SC disease that was undiagnosed antemortem. To the best of our knowledge, it is unusual for Hb SC to be diagnosed postmortem in adults. This case suggests that sickle cell disorders should be ruled out in patients at risk for
hemoglobinopathy
in the presence of signs and symptoms compatible with the disease, irrespective of age.
...
PMID:Postmortem diagnosis of hemoglobin SC disease complicated by fat embolism. 964 54
Beta-thalassemia is one of the most common inherited
hemoglobin disorders
in Pakistan. The carrier frequency is estimated to be 5.4%. To determine the spectrum of beta-globin gene defects causing beta-thalassemia, we have analyzed a representative sample of 602 alleles from six ethnic groups in Pakistan; 99.2% alleles were characterized, while 0.8% remained unidentified. The spectrum of mutations is heterogeneous and we have found 19 different mutations in all ethnic groups. The four most common mutations, IVS-I-5 (G-->C) (37.7%), codons 8/9 (+G) (21.1%), the 619 bp deletion (12.4%), and IVS-I-1 (G-->T) (9.5%), account for 80.7% of the alleles. There are differences between the ethnic groups and also between provinces. In the four provinces of Pakistan, the IVS-I-5 (G-->C) mutation is more prevalent in Sindh and Balochistan, bordering India in the south and Iran in the southwest, while the codons 8/9 (+G) mutation is more common in the Punjab and the North West Frontier Province, bordering India in the northeast and Afghanistan, respectively. The 619 bp deletion is high (46%) in Gujratis and Memons residing in the Province of Sindh, neighboring the Indian Gujrat.
Hemoglobin
1998 Jul
PMID:Molecular characterization of beta-thalassemia in Pakistan. 973 Mar 64
This report describes in detail the procedures for growing human erythroid cells in liquid culture for evaluating the potential of pharmacological agents to affect hemoglobin production. The procedure consists of two phases: an erythropoietin-independent phase in which peripheral blood mononuclear cells are first cultured in the presence of a combination of hemopoietic growth factors, but in the absence of erythropoietin, where early erythroid committed progenitors proliferate and differentiate into more mature progenitors. In the second phase, the latter cells, cultured in an erythropoietin-supplemented medium, continue to proliferate and mature into orthochromatic normoblasts and enucleated erythrocytes. This procedure produces large cultures of relatively pure and synchronized erythroid cell populations derived from normal donors or patients with beta
hemoglobinopathies
. The cultured cells recapitulate many aspects of erythropoiesis in vivo, including the donor's pattern of hemoglobin production (types and proportions). Tested compounds, at different concentrations, are added at different stages of the culture. The various types of hemoglobins and globin chains produced can be measured by high performance liquid chromatographic techniques and their cellular distribution analyzed by flow cytometry using fluorescently labeled antibodies against specific hemoglobins. This approach provides a screening system for compounds with potential therapeutic efficacy in patients with beta
hemoglobinopathies
.
Hemoglobin
PMID:Techniques for studying stimulation of fetal hemoglobin production in human erythroid cultures. 985 28
The Ggamma:Agamma ratio is around 70:30 at the time of birth and usually 40:60 in the trace amounts of Hb F found in the adult. Changes in this ratio are observed in several
hemoglobin disorders
providing insights on the genetics and molecular pathophysiology of these diseases. Several techniques have been proposed to measure the Ggamma:Agamma ratio. We here describe perfusion chromatography which is now in routine use in one of our laboratories. The method involves a high velocity flow of the mobile phase through a porous reversed phase chromatographic stationary bed and allows us to determine this parameter one order of magnitude faster than with conventional high performance liquid chromatography.
Hemoglobin
PMID:Gamma chain heterogeneity: determination of Hb F composition by perfusion chromatography. 985 30
Hemoglobin
S/O(Arab) (Hb S/O(Arab)) is a rare compound heterozygous
hemoglobinopathy
characterized by the presence of two variant beta-globin chains: beta6Glu --> Val (Hb S) and beta121Glu --> Lys (Hb O(Arab)). The diagnosis of Hb S/O(Arab) requires electrophoresis on both cellulose acetate and citrate agar, since Hb O(Arab) co-migrates with Hb C at alkaline pH and close to Hb S at acidic pH. To date only case reports and small series of patients with Hb S/O(Arab) have been described. To better characterize the clinical and laboratory aspects of this unusual disorder, we reviewed the Duke University Medical Center experience. We identified 13 African-American children and adults with Hb S/O(Arab) ranging in age from 2.7 to 62.5 years. All patients had hemolytic anemia with a median Hb of 8.7 gm/dL (range 6.1-9.9 gm/dL), and a median reticulocyte count of 5.8% (range 1.2-10.3%). The peripheral blood smear typically showed sickled erythrocytes, target cells, polychromasia, and nucleated red blood cells. All 13 patients have had significant clinical sickling events including acute chest syndrome (11), recurrent vasoocclusive painful events (10), dactylitis (7), gallstones (5), nephropathy (4), aplastic crises (2), avascular necrosis (2), leg ulcers (2), cerebrovascular accident (CVA) (1), osteomyelitis (1), and retinopathy (1). Four patients have died, including two from pneumococcal sepsis/meningitis at ages 5 and 10 years, one of acute chest syndrome at age 14 years, and one of multiorgan failure at age 35 years. We conclude that Hb S/O(Arab) disease is a severe sickling
hemoglobinopathy
with laboratory and clinical manifestations similar to those of homozygous sickle cell anemia.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin S/O(Arab): thirteen new cases and review of the literature. 1020 1
Thalassemia syndromes and unstable hemoglobins traditionally represent two phenotypically separate disorders of hemoglobin synthesis. Highly unstable hemoglobin variants, however, often have phenotypic characteristics associated with both ineffective erythropoiesis (thalassemias) and peripheral hemolysis (unstable hemoglobins). Many highly unstable beta chain variants cause a dominant thalassemia-like phenotype, in which simple heterozygotes for such mutations have a clinical expression similar to thalassemia intermedia. The phenotypic expression of highly unstable alpha-globin variants is usually less severe, due mainly to a gene dosage effect, and they are often only characterized on interaction with other alpha-thalassemia mutations, whence they are classified as nondeletional alpha-thalassemia determinants. This study reports the clinical and hematological findings in five cases with rare alpha-thalassemia genotypes: a single patient with the thalassemic alpha2-globin gene codon 59 Gly-->Asp hemoglobin variant in trans to an alpha(+)-thalassemia deletion, and four compound heterozygotes for the nondeletional alpha-thalassemia polyadenylation mutation (alpha2 gene AATAAA-->AATAAG or alpha(T-Saudi)alpha/-alpha) and an alpha(+)-thalassemia deletion. Evaluation of the clinical and hematological features in these two analogous genotypes clearly demonstrates the more severe clinical expression associated with the alpha-thalassemic unstable hemoglobin variant. In addition, the case in this study with the codon 59 alpha chain variant provides a further example illustrating the spectrum of phenotypes associated with the alpha-thalassemic
hemoglobinopathies
.
Hemoglobin
1999 Nov
PMID:Interaction of an alpha(+)-thalassemia deletion with either a highly unstable alpha-globin variant (alpha2, codon 59, GGC-->GAC) or a nondeletional alpha-thalassemia mutation (AATAAA-->AATAAG): comparison of phenotypes illustrating "dominant" alpha-thalassemia. 1056 21
Two new fetal hemoglobin variants affecting the Ggamma chain are reported. Hb F-Clamart was found during investigation of a French newborn who presented with a mild microcytemia. The second variant was found during neonatal screening for
hemoglobinopathies
of 30,000 babies from a population-at-risk living in the Paris region. It was named Hb F-Ouled Rabah because its structural modification and ethnic distribution is similar to that of Hb D-Ouled Rabah [beta19(B1)Asn-->Lys]. Hb F-Ouled Rabah is clinically silent and occurs at a frequency of ca. 0.1% in newborns originating from Maghreb. Structural characterization of both variants was done by protein chemistry methods, including amino acids analysis and mass spectrometry.
Hemoglobin
2000 Feb
PMID:Two new Ggamma chain variants: Hb F-clamart [gamma17(A14)Lys-->Asn] and Hb F-Ouled Rabah [gamma19(B1)Asn-->Lys]. 1072 15
Various blood indices vary in a newborn as compared to older child or adult. It depends on the gestational age, day of life, maternal factors, mode of delivery and site of blood collection.
Hemoglobin
, HCT & MCV tend to be higher in newborns. They further increase in first 2 days of life. Reticulocytosis and presence of nucleated red cells are normally seen in first week of life. Neonatal anemia is a common problem in NICU. It is usually caused by either hemorrhage or hemolysis and rarely due to decreased production. Hemorrhage can be ante or intra or post natal and it could be external or internal. It could be acute or chronic. Management of acute severe hemorrhage includes packed cell transfusion. Hemolysis is usually due to isoimmune hemolysis, G6PD deficiency or rarely due to the
hemoglobinopathy
like alpha-thalassemia or due to spherocytosis. Usually patients will have indirect hyperbilirubinemia which needs phototherapy or exchange transfusion. Rarely congenital pure red cell aplasia can present at birth with physical anomalies and anemia. Treatment of neonatal anemia depends on the arteriology.
...
PMID:Anemia in newborn. 1077 20
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